Pebbles From Heaven
From Horizon, November 1943, Volume 3, No. 3
By Manly P. Hall
According to the San Francisco Chronicle for August 29, 1943, something happened in Oakland this past summer which is still beyond the understanding of the local police force. The whole circumstance is startlingly reminiscent of similar natural occurrences outlined by the late Charles Fort, who had an inquiring type of mind in matters of the mysterious.
Mrs. Irene Fellows, who lives in a little white stucco cottage on 89th Avenue, suffered from a bombardment of rocks of assorted sizes and shapes. These stones came out of nowhere, propelled by some invisible agency, and banged against the walls and roof of the Fellows’ home.
The stones, smooth and round, ranged in size from little pebbles to larger ones the size of a hen's eggs. The rocks arrived with such frequency that they soon lay scattered about the house in a considerable number.
The police put the entire neighborhood under constant vigil. The stones continued to thud against the roof and walls. The most thorough investigation failed to discover any rock-throwing small boys.
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Mrs. Irene Fellows, who lives in a little white stucco cottage on 89th Avenue, suffered from a bombardment of rocks of assorted sizes and shapes. These stones came out of nowhere, propelled by some invisible agency, and banged against the walls and roof of the Fellows’ home.
The stones, smooth and round, ranged in size from little pebbles to larger ones the size of a hen's eggs. The rocks arrived with such frequency that they soon lay scattered about the house in a considerable number.
The police put the entire neighborhood under constant vigil. The stones continued to thud against the roof and walls. The most thorough investigation failed to discover any rock-throwing small boys.
Subscribe to the New PRS Journal to read on...
Nothing comes from nothing. Manly Hall’s vision for the All-Seeing Eye was entirely supported by contributions from its readers who paid for their subscription with gifts made according to their means. Manly Hall wrote,
“This magazine is published and distributed privately to those who make possible with their financial support its publication. The magazine cannot be bought and has no fixed value. Like all of the ancient teachings which it seeks to promulgate, it has no comparative value, but the students must support it for its own intrinsic merit.”